Cabin Fever: A Meditation on Comfort

A meditation to visualize safety and abundance where all your needs are provided for.

Is your creative work a source of comfort to you? This guided meditation allows you to visualize yourself in a cabin in the woods, where everything you need has been provided for.

Sit in a quiet place where you can relax. Consider the following questions. If you like, you can also use them as a journaling exercise, or the source for an art project.

What are your primary sources of comfort when times are tough?

Is your creative work a source of comfort to you, a solace when you're feeling sad or lonesome?

Which topics are you comfortable with in your creative work, and which ones are outside your comfort zone?

Which subjects are taboo, or off-limits  and why? Are there things you don't feel comfortable expressing?

Take a moment to think about these matters as you close your eyes. Visualize yourself in a cabin in the woods. This place is your safe haven away from the world, your Comfort Zone, contained within four walls.

Everything you need or desire has been provided for  out front is a porch with a swing and a great view of the mountains. A battle-scarred easel stands at the railing, overlooking the valley below, with a blank canvas awaiting your brushstrokes. You'll find plenty of paint inside  the living room has been converted to a studio, equipped with art supplies galore. Clay and beads, glitter and blank notebooks, glue and guitars and drums.

The kitchen has already been stocked with your favorite foods, and a bottle of champagne is chilling in the refrigerator, to welcome you home. There's a huge bathtub for soaking your cares away and reading delicious novels, and a cushy window seat with a view of the ridge.

The bedroom is perfect  you see a big feather bed, and an old roll-top desk in one corner just begging for your stories and poems. Drawn to the studio, you notice musical instruments and art supplies, a stereo, recording equipment, and more. This is your studio of the mind. Here, you can create anything your mind can conceive  songs and paintings, sketches and sculptures, stories and symphonies anything your art desires.

Spend as much time here as you like  it is always waiting for you, and you're welcome any time. You possess the only key, although you're welcome to invite a special guest anytime you desire company, or inspiration.

After a few visits to this safe, inviting place, you might notice yourself getting restless. Do the four walls of your comfort zone ever start to close in, threatening to smother your creative work?

Getting cabin fever? Excellent. It is important to step outside your comfort zone as an artist, and experience new things. It's a good way to grow as an artist.

Venture outside the cabin and into the wider world beyond. Play. Have an adventure, or two. Break a leg, break your heart. Fall in love. Try something new. Make mistakes. Screw up. Get paint under your fingernails and clay on your feet. Walk barefoot in the grass. Fall down. Get up again. Repeat as needed.

Experience real life. Yes, you'll be uncomfortable and messy and heartbroken, poor and miserable, dirty and tired and sore at the end of a long day  that's what makes you human. But you will sleep deep, knowing you've truly lived each day to the fullest and your dreams will be sweet.

Going Deeper: Outside Your Comfort Zone

Journal or create an art project expressing something outside your normal comfort zone. Do this at least once a week, until it doesn't make you feel queasy anymore. When you start loving it, do it as often as you want to. Take a risk. Plant a dream seed, and see what blooms.

Inspiring Books to Feed Your Inner Artist

Eat Mangoes Naked by SARK

Put On Your Crown: Life  Changing Moments on the Path to Queendom by Queen Latifah

Watership Down by Richard Adams

10 Great Films Based on Amazing True Stories

The Fighter
Frida
The Hours
Notorious
Ray
Frida
8 Mile
Walk the Line
A Beautiful Mind
Almost Famous